Is it possible to "hear" the electrons in SSD disk drives?

Is it possible to "hear" the electrons in SSD disk drives?
I bought it off some guy on kijiji, but this thing makes a lot of racket. I swear it sounds like it's spinning up, but it's not an HDD disk drive. Maybe it's a bunch of electrons getting excited and spinning in unison? I read some forum I should check the control gate, but the disk uses torx screws and my drivers are all stripped because my torx isn't as good as Phillips.

Attached: index.jpg (1200x1600, 215K)

Other urls found in this thread:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetically_excited_acoustic_noise_and_vibration
newegg.com/p/N82E16822178340
twitter.com/NSFWRedditGif

>s it possible to "hear" the electrons in SSD disk drives?

Attached: 1506656526142.png (645x729, 82K)

do you hear your cpu doing noise?
there are a lot more electrons moving in there

>I bought it off some guy on kijiji, but this thing makes a lot of racket. I swear it sounds like it's spinning up, but it's not an HDD disk drive.

bro you got scammed. its probably a laptop sized hdd put inside a SSD casing

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetically_excited_acoustic_noise_and_vibration

Sshd contains both a SSD and HDD... Fucking moron...

if pic is related then you're a fucking idiot

That's what I thought too

That Image you posted is a hybrid drive:

Instead of a 32/64/128MB DRAM cache, it has a 8/16/32GB NAND cache.

Works well enough after the "hot" data is migrated to the SSD portion, but it doesn't last nearly as long as either a straight-up SSD or HDD.

According to Newegg, st1000lm014 is this product newegg.com/p/N82E16822178340

it's got an 8GB "SSD" cache.

You can hear marginal capacitors make noise when they are under load. Its's an easy way to tell if something is below the required specs, or about to fail.

lmao dude that's a hard drive
the noise you are hearing is the platter spinning

shut the actual fuck up.

/thread

You've never encountered "capacitor squeal" or "coil whine"? Or have you just wrecked your hearing so you don't notice it?

I hear it sometimes when the room gets quiet. Not joking, I have tried pulling it from the socket and there is then less noise. Same goes for certain other parts.

based

>buying used electronics
Why do people do this to themselves?

This is why spread spectrum was invented.
So night illuminescents dont pick up your CPU magnetic flux waves as it fluctuates voltages a million times a second

It's the other way around, to keep the frequency stable

>Electrons getting excited
Keking rn

Attached: 70123358_706630599831175_6463926240041500672_n.png (720x960, 934K)

>SSHD
>a noise
How much does this fucking country waste on education I swer on me mum

the fuck?

Attached: 80f.png (360x361, 25K)

GO BACK TO PLEBBIT

the speed of a hard drive and the lifespan of an SSD. if you weren't trolling you'd have gotten memed

>GO BACK TO PLEBBIT
lol GO BACK TO PLEBBIT

No

>ssd disk drive
>solid state disk disk drive
>hdd disk drive
>hard disk drive disk drive
go back to /v/

OP is trolling or genuinely retarded with that SSHD, but it's true that SSDs can make noise.